The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Chairman France on leave after arrest

-

NASCAR chairman and CEO Brian France said Monday he was taking an indefinite leave of absence following his arrest on charges of driving while intoxicate­d and criminal possession of oxycodone.

France was seen rolling through a stop sign in Sag Harbor, N.Y., on Sunday and had a blood-alcohol content that was more than twice the legal limit for driving, smelled of booze and slurred his words, police said. He said in a statement Monday that effective immediatel­y he would take a leave of absence from his position “to focus on my personal affairs.”

“I apologize to our fans, our industry and my family for the impact of my actions last night,” he said.

France has been NASCAR’s chairman and CEO since 2003. His uncle Jim France, a vice chairman and executive vice president, will take over those roles on an interim basis.

France, 56, spent the night in jail and was arraigned at Sag Harbor Village Justice Court. He was released on his own recognizan­ce and is due back in court Sept. 14.

His lawyer referred reporters to a NASCAR statement on the matter. The organizati­on said it takes his arrest “as a serious matter and will issue a statement after we have all of the facts.”

France was pulled over and arrested at about 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Police said they saw his 2017 Lexus roll through a stop sign near the Sag Harbor waterfront. His eyes were red and glassy, and he struggled to keep his balance during field sobriety tests, police said. Tests showed his blood-alcohol content was 0.18, police said. The legal limit for driving in New York is 0.08. Officers found five oxycodone pills during a subsequent search, police said.

NHRA: Antron Brown became the fourth NHRA driver to reach 50 Top Fuel wins Sunday at the CatSpot NHRA Northwest Nationals in Kent, Wash.

The three-time Top Fuel season champ beat teammate Leah Pritchett with a 3.835-second run at 322.84 mph. Ron Capps won in Funny Car and Tanner Gray won Pro Stock.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States